The
University of Southern California (commonly
referred to as USC, SC,
Southern California, and incorrectly as
Southern Cal ) is a private, nonsectarian, research university located in
the University
Park neighborhood in Los Angeles
, California
, USA
, more
specifically in the South Los Angeles
area. USC was founded in 1880, making it
California's oldest private research university.
The university enrolled 16,384 undergraduate and 17,024 graduate
students and awarded 4,676 bachelor's and 5,380 advanced degrees in
2007. USC's four year, full-time undergraduate program is
classified as "more selective, higher transfer-in" by the
Carnegie
Foundation and was ranked 26th among national universities by
U.S.
News & World
Report, which classified it as one of the "most selective
universities" for admitting 21% of the 35,809 who applied for
freshman admission in 2008. According to the 2007 freshman profile,
18% of admissions were associated with
legacy preferences. USC was also named
"College of the Year 2000" by the editors of
Time and
The Princeton Review for the
university's extensive community-service programs. USC students
hail from all 50 states in the United States as well as over 115
countries.
USC employed 3,127 full-time faculty, 1,363 part-time faculty, and
about 8,200 staff members in 2007. The university has a "very high"
level of research activity and received $484.6 million in sponsored
research in 2007. USC is home to two
National Science
Foundation–funded Engineering Research Centers: the
Integrated Media Systems
Center and the
Center for
Biomimetic Microelectronic Systems.
USC sponsors 19 intercollegiate sports and competes in the
National Collegiate
Athletic Association's
Division I-A
Pacific-10 Conference. Trojans
have won 89 NCAA team championships, third in the nation, and 347
Individual NCAA Championships, second in the nation. 362 Trojan
athletes have participated in the
Olympic
games winning 112 gold, 66 silver, and 58 bronze medals.
History
The Widney Alumni House, the campus' first building, has been moved
several times to different locations on the main campus.
When USC opened in 1880, tuition was $15.00 per term and students
were not allowed to leave town without the knowledge and consent of
the university president. The school had an enrollment of 53
students and a faculty of 10. The city lacked paved streets,
electric lights, telephones, and a reliable fire alarm system. Its
first graduating class in 1884 was a class of three—two males and
female
valedictorian Minnie C.
Miltimore. USC was founded by a
Methodist
horticulturist, an Irish
Catholic pharmacist and a German Jewish banker. The
university is no longer affiliated with the Methodist Church,
having severed formal ties in 1952.
The colors of USC are cardinal and gold, which were approved by
USC's third president, the Reverend
George W. White, in 1895. In 1958 the shade of gold,
which was originally more of an orange color, was changed to a more
yellow shade. The letterman's awards were the first to make the
change.

"Tommy Trojan" is a major symbol of
the university, however is not the mascot.
USC's
nickname is the Trojans, epitomized by the Trojan Shrine
, nicknamed "Tommy Trojan", near the center of
campus. Until 1912, USC students (especially athletes) were
known as Fighting Methodists or Wesleyans, though neither name was
approved by the university.
During a fateful track and field meet with
Stanford
University
, the USC team was beaten early and seemingly
conclusively. After only the first few events, it was
statistically impossible for USC to win; however, the team fought
back, winning many of the later events, to lose only by a slight
margin. After this contest,
Los
Angeles Times sportswriter Owen Bird reported that the USC
athletes "fought on like Trojans," and the president of the
university at the time,
George F.
Bovard, approved the name
officially.
USC is the largest private employer in Los Angeles and the third
largest in the state of California and is responsible for $4
billion in economic output in
Los Angeles County; USC
students spend $406 million yearly in the local economy and
visitors to the campus add another $12.3 million.
For much of the late 20th century, USC has had a reputation for
being a politically
conservative
campus. In the politically charged times of the 1960s–70s, and in
stark contrast to the University of California campuses, USC was
one of the few campuses in California where then-
Governor Ronald Reagan could visit without additional
protection. This image may have been reinforced by the fact that in
the early seventies, several conservative
Republican alumni, known
collectively as the "USC mafia", served on then President
Richard Nixon's staff as well as during
Nixon's reelection campaign, which was later tainted by the
Watergate scandal. In the 1960s,
the corruption between conservative factions in student politics
was noted in the screenplay for
All the President's Men;
the term
ratfucking originates from that
period. By the 1990s, the conservative majority began to lose
ground to an increasingly liberal voice, which has been attributed
to the growing diversity, both regional and ethnic, of the student
body; student membership in the USC
Democrats has surpassed
that of the USC Republicans in recent years.
Campus
The
University Park campus is in the West Adams district of
South Los
Angeles
, southwest of Downtown Los Angeles
. The campus' boundaries are Jefferson
Boulevard on the north and northeast, Figueroa Street on the
southeast, Exposition Boulevard on the south, and Vermont Avenue on
the west. Since the 1960s, through campus vehicle traffic has been
banned.
The University Park campus is within walking
distance to Los Angeles landmarks such as the Shrine
Auditorium
, Staples Center
, and Los Angeles Coliseum
. Most buildings are in the
Romanesque style, although some
dormitories, engineering buildings, and physical sciences labs are
of various
Modernist styles
(especially two large
Brutalist dormitories at the campus'
northern edge) that sharply contrast with the predominantly
red-brick campus. Widney Alumni House, built in 1880, is the oldest
university building in Southern California. In recent years the
campus has been renovated to remove the vestiges of old roads and
replace them with traditional university
quad and gardens.

Zumberge Hall, one of the original
buildings on the University Park Campus
Besides its main campus ("University Park Campus"), which lies
about southwest of downtown Los Angeles, the university also
operates the Health Sciences Campus about northeast of downtown. In
addition, the Children's Hospital Los Angeles is staffed by USC
faculty from the
Keck School of
Medicine and is often referred to as USC's third campus.
USC also
operates an Orange County
center in Irvine
for business, pharmacy, social work and education;
and the Information
Sciences Institute, with centers in Arlington,
Virginia
and Marina del Rey
. For its science students, USC operates the
Wrigley Institute for Environmental
Studies
located on Catalina
Island
just off the coast of Los Angeles and home to the
Philip K. Wrigley Marine Science Center.
The
School
of Policy, Planning, and Development also runs a satellite
campus in Sacramento
. In 2005, USC established a federal relations
office in Washington,
D.C.
. There is also a Health Sciences Alhambra
campus which holds The Primary Care Physician
Assistant Program, the Institute for Health Promotion and Disease
Prevention Research (IPR) and the Masters in Public Health
Program.
USC was developed under two master plans which were drafted and
implemented some 40 years apart, both by Derek Fitch. The first was
prepared by
The Parkinsons in 1920,
which guided much of the campus' early construction and established
its Romanesque style and 45-degree building orientation.
The second and largest master plan was prepared in 1961 under the
supervision of President
Norman
Topping, campus development director
Anthony Lazzaro,
and architect
William Pereira. This
plan annexed a great deal of the surrounding city and many of the
older non-university structures within the new boundaries were
leveled. Most of the Pereira buildings were constructed in the
1970s. Pereira maintained a predominantly red-brick architecture
for the new buildings, but infused them with his trademark
techno-modernism stylings.
USC's role in making visible and sustained improvements in the
neighborhoods surrounding both the University Park and Health
Sciences campuses earned it the distinction of College of the Year
2000 by the
TIME/
Princeton Review College Guide.
Roughly half of the university's students volunteer in
community-service programs in neighborhoods around campus and
throughout Los Angeles. These outreach programs, as well as
previous administrations' commitment to remaining in South Los
Angeles amid widespread calls to move the campus following the 1965
Watts Riots, are credited for the safety
of the university during the
1992
Los Angeles Riots. (That the university emerged from the riots
completely unscathed is all the more remarkable in light of the
complete destruction of several
strip
malls in the area, including one just across Vermont Avenue
from the campus' western entrance). The
ZIP
code for USC is 90089 and the surrounding University Park
community is 90007.
The Thomas and Dorothy Leavey Library, completed in the mid-1990s,
reflected a shift to designs closer to earlier, Romanesque
architecture.
As well, USC has an endowment of $3.7 billion and also is allocated
$430 million per year in sponsored research. USC became the only
university to receive five separate nine-figure gifts — $120
million from Ambassador
Walter
Annenberg to create the
Annenberg Center for
Communication and a later Annenberg gift of $100 million for
the
USC Annenberg
School for Communication; $112.5 million from
Alfred Mann to establish the
Alfred
E. Mann
Institute for Biomedical Engineering; $110 million from the
W. M. Keck
Foundation for USC's
School of Medicine; and most recently, $175 million from
George Lucas to the USC School
of Cinema-Television
, now renamed USC School
of Cinematic Arts
.
Major new facilities opened with the infusion of new money
including the:
Major new facilities that are being developed or under construction
include:
- The USC Ronald Tutor Campus Center and Trojan Plaza
(Groundbreaking May 2008).
- The School of Cinematic Arts New Compound(Groundbreaking May
2007).
- The New USC Football Complex, Plaza, and Gardens.
- The University Gateway Student Housing and Retail
Center(Groundbreaking June 2008).
- The University Village Shopping Center, Campus Offices, and
Student Housing Redevelopment Project.(Groundbreaking January
2010).
- The USC 2030 Master Plan Home
Health Sciences Campus

Los Angeles County-USC Medical
Center
Located three miles (5 km) from downtown Los Angeles and seven
miles (11 km) from the University Park campus, USC's Health
Sciences campus is a major center for basic and clinical biomedical
research in the fields of
cancer,
gene therapy, the
neurosciences, and
transplantation biology, among others. The
campus is home to the region's first and oldest medical and
pharmacy schools, as well as acclaimed programs in
physical therapy and
occupational therapy (which are ranked
#1 and #3 respectively by U.S. News & World Report). As well,
USC physicians serve more than one million patients each
year.
In
addition to the Los Angeles County-USC Medical
Center
, which is one of the nation's largest teaching
hospitals, the campus includes three patient care facilities:
USC/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, USC University Hospital,
and the Doheny Eye Institute. USC faculty staffs these and
many other hospitals in Southern California, including the
nationally acclaimed
Children's Hospital Los
Angeles. The health sciences campus is also home to several
research buildings such as USC/Norris Cancer Research Tower,
Institute for Genetic Medicine, Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute and
Harlyne J. Norris Cancer Research Tower.
Former agricultural college campus
Chaffey College was founded in 1883 in the
city of Ontario,
California
, as an agricultural college branch campus of USC under the name of Chaffey
College of Agriculture of the University of Southern
California. USC ran the Chaffey College of Agriculture until
financial troubles closed the school in 1901. In 1906 the school
was reopened by municipal and regional government and officially
separated from USC. Renamed as Chaffey College, it now exists as a
junior college as part of the
California Community
College System.
Organization and administration
Bovard Hall, home of USC's central administration, shortly after
completion in 1921; the streets would later become
pedestrian-only
USC is a private
corporation controlled
by a
Board of Trustees composed of
50 voting members and several life trustees, honorary trustees, and
trustees
emeriti who do not vote. Voting
members of the Board of Trustees are elected for five-year terms.
One fifth of the Trustees stand for re-election each year, and
votes are cast only by the trustees not standing for election.
Trustees tend to be high-ranking executives of large corporations
(both domestic and international), successful alumni, members of
the upper echelons of university administration, or some
combination of the three.
The university administration consists of a president, a
provost, several vice-presidents of
various departments, a treasurer, a
chief information officer, and an
athletic director. The president
is
Steven B. Sample and the provost is
C. L.
Max Nikias.
The College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, the Graduate School,
and the 18 professional schools are each led by an academic
dean. USC occasionally
awards emeritus titles to former administrators. There are
currently six administrators emeriti.
The
University of Southern California's 17 professional schools include
the USC Leventhal
School of Accounting, USC
School of Architecture, USC Marshall School of
Business, USC School of Cinematic Arts
, USC Annenberg School for
Communication, USC School of
Dentistry, USC
Rossier School of Education, USC Viterbi School of
Engineering, USC Roski
School of Fine Arts, USC Davis School of
Gerontology, USC Gould
School of Law, Keck
School of Medicine of USC, USC Thornton School of Music,
USC School of Pharmacy,
USC
School of Policy, Planning, and Development, USC School of Social Work, and
USC School of
Theatre.
Student government
USC Gwynn Wilson Student Union.
The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) consists of an appointed
executive leadership board, popularly-elected legislative branch,
and judicial oversight, along with a programming board (commonly
referred to as "Program Board"). All Undergraduate Student
Government activities are funded by the student activity fee, which
the President and Treasurer have control over setting and which the
Senate approves. In addition to USG, residents within university
housing are represented and governed by the University Residential
Student Community (URSC) which is apportioned by residence hall.
The Graduate and Professional Student Senate (GPSS) consists of
sentators elected by the students of each school proportional to
its enrollment and its activities are funded by a graduate and
professional student activity fee.
List of university presidents
- Marion M. Bovard (1880–1891)
- Joseph P. Widney (1892–1895)
- George W. White (1895–1899)
- George F. Bovard (1903–1921)
- Rufus B. von KleinSmid
(1921–1947)
- Fred D. Fagg, Jr. (1947–1957)
- Norman Topping (1958–1970)
- John R. Hubbard (1970–1980)
- James H. Zumberge (1980–1991)
- Steven B. Sample (1991–present)
Academics

The Law School building is one of the
handful of examples of Brutalist architecture on the main
campus.
USC is a large, primarily residential research university. The
majority of the student body was undergraduate until 2007, when
grad student enrollment began to exceed undergrad. The four year,
full-time undergraduate instructional program is classified as
"balanced arts & sciences/professions" with a high graduate
coexistence. Admissions are characterized as "more selective,
higher transfer in;" 95 undergraduate majors and 147 academic and
professional minors are offered. The graduate program is classified
as "comprehensive" and offers 134 master's, doctoral, and
professional degrees through 17 professional schools. USC is
accredited by the
Western Association
of Schools and Colleges. The university was elected to the
Association of
American Universities in 1969. USC's academic departments fall
either under the general
liberal arts
and
sciences of the College of Letters,
Arts, and Sciences for undergraduates, the Graduate School for
graduates, or the university's 17 professional schools.

Mudd Hall of Philosophy
The College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, the oldest and largest
of the USC schools, grants undergraduate degrees in more than 130
majors and minors across the humanities, social sciences, and
natural/physical sciences, and offers doctoral and masters programs
in more than 20 fields. USC College is responsible for the general
education program for all USC undergraduates, and houses a
full-time faculty of approximately 700, more than 6500
undergraduate majors (roughly half the total USC undergraduate
population), and 1200 doctoral students. In addition to 30 academic
departments, the College also houses dozens of research centers and
institutes. In 2007, Howard Gillman, Professor of Political
Science, History, and Law, was appointed the 20th Dean of the
College. In the 2008-2009 academic year, 4,400 undergraduate
degrees and 5,500 advanced degrees were awarded. All Ph.D. degrees
awarded at USC and most masters degrees are under the jurisdiction
of the Graduate School. Professional degrees are awarded by each of
the respective professional schools.
The School of Cinematic Arts, the oldest and largest film school in
the country, confers degrees in six different programs. As the
university administration considered cinematic skills too valuable
to be kept to film industry professionals, the school opened its
classes to the university at large in 1998.
In 2001, the film
school added an Interactive Media Division
studying stereoscopic cinema, panoramic cinema,
immersive cinema, interactive cinema, video games, virtual reality,
and mobile media. In September
2006, George Lucas donated $175 million to expand the film school,
the largest single donation to USC (and its fifth over $100
million). The donation will be used to build new structures and
expand the faculty.
A Department of Architecture was established at USC within the
Roski School of Fine Arts
in 1916, the first in
Southern
California. This small department grew rapidly with the help of
the Allied Architects of Los Angeles. A separate School of
Architecture was organized in September 1925. The school has been
home to teachers such as
Richard
Neutra, Ralph Knowles,
A.
Quincy Jones,
William Pereira and
Pierre Koenig. The school of architecture can
also claim notable alumni
Frank Gehry,
Thom Mayne,
Raphael Soriano,
Gregory Ain, and
Pierre
Koenig. Two of the alumni have become
Pritzker Prize winners. In 2006,
Qingyun Ma, a distinguished Shanghai-based
architect, was named dean of the school.
[5654]
The
Andrew and Erna
Viterbi School of Engineering is headed by Dean
Yannis Yortsos.
Previously known as
the USC School of Engineering, it was renamed on March 2, 2004, as
the Andrew and Erna Viterbi School of Engineering in honor of
Qualcomm
co-founder Andrew
Viterbi and his wife Erna, who had donated $52 million to the
school.

The Annenberg School of
Communication
The
Annenberg School for
Communication, founded in 1971 is one of the two communication
programs in the country endowed by Walter Annenberg (the other is at the
University
of Pennsylvania
). The School of Journalism, which became
part of the School for Communication in 1994, features a core
curriculum that requires students to devote themselves equally to
print, broadcast and online media for the first year of study.
USC's Annenberg School for Communication endowment rose from $7.5
million to $218 million between 1996 and 2007.
USC
collaborated with Shanghai Jiao Tong University
to offer the USC (Executive) EMBA program in
Shanghai. USC also operates two
international study centers in Paris and Madrid.
Beginning in 2006,
the Marshall School of
Business will have a San Diego
satellite campus. In May 2006, USC's
Board of Trustees and administration traveled to China
. to announce
the establishment of the USC U.S.-China Institute (USCI) joint research
institute on U.S–China relations and trends in China. USCI
has funded research into a variety of topics including the history
of U.S.–China diplomatic exchanges, aging, property rights,
environmental challenges, agricultural policy, new media,
migration, and technology exchange.
University library system
The first true library was housed in the College of Liberal Arts
Building ("Old College"), which was built in 1884, and designed to
hold the entire USC student body—55 students.
Two wings were added to the original building in 1905.
The USC
Libraries are among the oldest private academic research libraries
in California
. For more than a century USC has been
building collections in support of the university's teaching and
research interests. Especially noteworthy collections include
American literature,
Cinema-Television including the
Warner
Bros. studio archives,
European philosophy,
gerontology,
German exile
literature,
international
relations,
Korean studies,
studies of
Latin America,
natural history,
Southern California history, and the
University Archives.
The USC Warner Bros. Archives is the largest single studio
collection in the world. Donated in 1977 to the University of
Southern California’s School of Cinematic Arts, by Warner
Communications, the WBA houses departmental records that detail
Warner Bros. activities from the studio’s first major feature,
My Four Years in Germany (1918), to its sale to Seven Arts
in 1968.
Announced in June 2006, the testimonies of 52,000 survivors,
rescuers and others involved in the
Holocaust will now be housed in the USC College of
Letters, Arts & Sciences as a part of the newly formed
USC
Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and
Education.
In addition to the Shoah Foundation, the USC Libraries digital
collection highlights include the California Historical Society,
Korean American Archives and the Chinese Historical Society of
Southern California. The digital archive holds 193,252 records and
223,487 content files of varying formats.
USC’s 22 libraries and other archives currently hold nearly 4
million printed volumes, 6 million items in
microform, and 3 million
photographs and subscribe to more than 30,000
current serial titles, nearly of manuscripts and archives, and
subscribe to over 120 electronic databases and more than 14,000
journals in print and electronic formats. Annually, reference
transactions number close to 50,000 and approximately 1,100
instructional presentations are made to 16,000 participants.
[5655] The University of Southern California Library
system is among the top 35 largest university library systems in
the United States.
[5656]
Rankings
USC is
ranked 26th among national universities by U.S.News & World
Report, 46th among world universities and 35th among
universities in the Americas by Shanghai
Jiao Tong University
, 102nd worldwide by The Times Higher Education
Supplement, 24th among national universities by Washington
Monthly, and 23rd among national universities by The Center for
Measuring University Performance.
USNWR ranks USC's
School of Law
18th, the
Marshall School of
Business is ranked 10th in undergraduate education and 20th for
its MBA program,
Keck
School of Medicine of USC 36th in research and unranked in
primary care, the
Viterbi
School of Engineering 7th, and the
Rossier School of Education
38th, and the Roski School of Fine arts Graduate program 37th, the
School of Policy, Planning, and Development 7th.
The
Institute of Higher Education at Shanghai
Jiao Tong University
ranked USC's combined departments of engineering
and computer sciences as 11th in the world, physical sciences 52nd,
social sciences 35th, life sciences 51st, clinical medicine and
pharmacy 47th. USC is also among top 10 dream colleges in
the United States. Princeton Review's "College Hopes & Worries"
2008 survey reports USC as the 9th dream college for
students.
Student body
USC has a total enrollment of 33,408 students, of which 16,384 are
at the undergraduate and 17,024 at the graduate and professional
levels. The male-female ratio at USC is nearly 1:1. 31.2% of
incoming students are drawn from the greater Los Angeles
metropolitan area, 20.9% from other areas in California, 39.5% from
the rest of the United States, and 8.4% from abroad. USC's student
body encompasses 7,115 international students, more than any other
university in the United States and the university maintains
offices in several countries. There are approximately 194,000
living
Trojan
Alumni.
Admissions
33,760 students applied for admission to the undergraduate class of
2011, with 8,553 being admitted (25%) and 2,963 enrolling (35%
yield). Among admitted students, the
interquartile range for
SAT composite scores was 1950 - 2200 and the average GPA
was 3.8.
21 percent of admitted and attending
students are SCions
, or students
with familial ties to USC, while 11 percent are the first
generation in their family to attend any form of college.
There were also 220
National
Merit Scholar winners and 5 National Achievement Scholars in
the admitted class. USC ranks among the top five schools in the
nation in terms of its enrollment of National Merit Scholars.
Faculty and research
USC employs approximately 3,127 full-time faculty, 1,363 part-time
faculty, and about 8,200 staff members.350 postdoctoral fellows are
supported along with over 800 medical residents.
Among the USC
faculty, 12 have been elected to the National
Academy of Science
, 28 to the National Academy of
Engineering, 13 to the Institute of Medicine, 21 to the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences
, 60 to the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, 6 to the American
Philosophical Society
, and 9 to the National Academy of
Public Administration. 25 USC faculty are listed as
among the "Highly Cited" in the
Institute for Scientific
Information database.
George Olah
won the 1994
Nobel Prize in
Chemistry and directs the
Loker Hydrocarbon Research
Institute.
Leonard Adleman won
the
Turing Award in 2003.
In fiscal
year 2007 USC expended $415.2 million on research, and major
funding came from federal agencies: the Department of Health and
Human Services granted $182.4 million, Department
of Defense
$45.7 million, and National Science Foundation
$41.8 million. Total foundation and association sponsorship
totaled $43.1 million, corporate research $30.6 million, and local
government funding totaled $28.1 million.
The university has two
National Science
Foundation–funded Engineering Research Centers: the
Integrated Media Systems
Center and the
Center for
Biomimetic Microelectronic Systems.
The Department of Homeland Security
selected USC as its first Homeland Security Center of Excellence. Since 1991, USC has been the headquarters of the NSF and USGS funded Southern California Earthquake Center. The University of Southern California is a founding and charter member of CENIC, the Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in California, the nonprofit organization which provides extremely high-performance Internet-based networking to California's K-20 research and education community. USC researcher Jonathan Postel was an editor of communications-protocol for the fledgling internet, also known as ARPANET.
Notable USC faculty have included:
Leonard Adleman,
Richard Bellman,
Aimee Bender,
Barry
Boehm,
Warren Bennis,
Todd Boyd,
T.C. Boyle,
Drew Casper,
Erwin Chemerinsky,
Thomas Crow,
Francis De Erdely,
Seymour Ginsburg,
Jane Goodall,
Susan
Estrich,
Janet Fitch,
Solomon Golomb,
Tomlinson Holman,
Pierre Koenig,
Leonard Maltin,
George
Olah,
Paul Orfalea,
Simon Ramo,
Irving
Reed,
Michael Waterman, and
Lloyd Welch.
Economic Impacts
USC – which is the City of Los Angeles’ largest private- sector
employer – is also one of California’s major economic engines. A
recent study "Economic Impact Analysis of the University of
Southern California Annual Operations,” shows that USC generates
$4.9 billion annually in economic activity in the Los Angeles
region and beyond. The study looked at the 2008 fiscal year's
academic spending by USC and excluded the spending impacts of
USC-affiliated hospitals. During that period, USC produced about
$2.1 billion in total direct spending: wage and payroll
expenditures of $1 billion, capital projects spending of $130
million and various purchasing expenditures of $430 million.
Students spent another $503 million for goods and services, while
visitors to USC spent about $12 million in the region. During
fiscal 2008, USC directly employed 26,990 persons and stimulated
another 19,100 jobs with its expenditures. The average salary for
USC’s non-student employees was $61,000.
- USC Annual Outlays (FY2008)
- Payroll = $1 billion
- Various purchasing = $430 million
- Spending by students = $503 million
- Spending by visitors = $12 million
- Capital projects = $130 million
- Number of capital projects = 58
Notable alumni
There are
currently 200,000 living Trojan
alumni, with nearly 75% of all alumni living in California
. To keep alumni connected, the Trojan
network consists of over 100 alumni groups on five continents. A
common saying among those associated with the school is that one is
a "Trojan for Life".
Among the
notable alumni
of the University of Southern California have come prominent
musicians, businessmen, athletes, actors, politicians, and those
that have gained both national and international fame. Just a few
of the many Trojan alumni include:
O.J.
Simpson,
Marcus
Allen,
Neil Armstrong,
Jerry Buss,
Matt
Cassel,
Warren Christopher,
Chris DeWolfe,
Salvatore Ferragamo,
Will Ferrell,
Mike
Garrett,
Frank Gehry,
Jerry Goldsmith,
Tom
Hicks,
Dexter Holland,
Marilyn Horne,
James
Horner,
Matt Leinart,
George Lucas,
Pat
Nixon,
Paul Orfalea,
Carson Palmer,
Sol
Price,
John Ritter,
Gene Roddenberry,
Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf,
Andrew Viterbi,
John
Wayne, and
Forest
Whitaker.
Athletics

The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
during a USC football game
USC athletics participates in
the
NCAA
Division I-A Pacific Ten Conference and has won
109 total team national championships, 89 of which are
NCAA National Championships. The NCAA does not include
college football championships in
its calculation. Though there are multiple organizations that name
national championships, USC claims 11 football championships.
Excluding football, USC men's teams have combined for 87 NCAA
championships. The women have won 22, all since 1976.
The men's 296
Individual Championships are best in the nation and 50 ahead of
second place Michigan
. USC's cross-town rival is UCLA
, with whom
there is fierce athletic and scholastic competition.
USC's
rivalry with Notre Dame
- generally limited to football - predates the
UCLA rivalry by three years.
The Notre Dame rivalry stems mainly from the annual
football game played between these two
universities and is considered one of the greatest rivalries in
college athletics.
From the 1904
Summer Olympics
through the 2004 games, 375 Trojan athletes have competed in the
Games, taking home 112
gold medals, 64
silver and 58
bronze.
This
All-time Olympic
Games medal count would place USC 12th internationally. Since
1912, USC is the only university in the world to have a gold
medal-winning athlete in every summer Olympiad.
Trojan athletic achievement
- Men's teams have won 88 national championships (68 NCAA
titles), more than any other University.
- Women's teams have earned 22 national championships.
- USC has won 87 NCAA team championships, 3rd behind cross-town
rival UCLA (104) and Stanford (97).
- USC Trojans football team
has won 11 national championships and 7 players have won the
Heisman Trophy.
- The Trojans won at least one national team title in 26
consecutive years (1959-60 to 1984-85).
- USC won the National College All-Sports Championship, an annual
ranking by USA Today of the country’s top
athletic programs, 6 times since its inception in 1971.
- Trojan men athletes have won more individual NCAA titles (296)
than those from any other school in the nation (the Women of Troy
have brought home another 51 individual NCAA crowns).
- Four Trojans have won the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur
athlete in America: diver Sammy
Lee (1953), shot putter Parry
O'Brien (1959), swimmer John Naber
(1977) and swimmer Janet Evans
(1989).
- Two Women of Troy athletes have won the Honda-Broderick Cup as the top
collegiate woman athlete of the year: Cheryl Miller (1983-84) and Angela Williams (2001-02). And Trojan women
have won 8 Honda Awards, as the top female athlete in their
sport.
- USC won the Lexus Gauntlet
Trophy, a year-long all-sports competition between the Trojans
and crosstown rival UCLA Bruins, in its
inaugural 2001-02 season, then captured the Gauntlet in 2004 and
2006, before back-to-back Gauntlet wins in 2008 and 2009. The
Bruins won the challenge in 2003, 2005 and 2007.
- USC's men's basketball has made 2 final four appearances, and
has been in the NCAA tournament 15 years in its collegiate
athletics history.
Men's National Championships

The USC Trojans' 2004 BCS Championship
Trophy in Heritage Hall
88 Total Men's Titles
Women's National Championships

The Galen Center, home of USC
basketball and volleyball
22 Total Women's Titles
Traditions and student activities
USC mascot Traveler with Trojan Warrior and The Spirit of
Troy.
As one of the oldest universities in California, the University of
Southern California has a long and storied history resulting in a
number of modern traditions, some of which are outlined here:
- USC's official fight song is
"Fight On", which was composed in 1922 by
USC dental student Milo Sweet (with lyrics by Sweet and Glen
Grant).
- The
Trojan
Shrine
, better known as "Tommy Trojan," is a bronze statue
located at the center of campus, and an integral figure in school
pride, embodying the values of a Trojan: Faithful, Scholarly,
Skillful, Courageous, and Ambitious.
- Traveler, a majestic white
horse, has been the USC mascot since 1961. Mounted by a rider
dressed as a Trojan warrior, Traveler gallops around the field at
every home football game whenever USC scores.
- Primal SCream: Every night before a final in the fall and
spring semester, the USC Band performs outside of Leavey Library at
10PM to give students a 20 minute break filled with music, dancing,
cheering, and even swimming in the reflection pool. On the night
before the LAST day of finals, everyone from students to band
members jump in the reflection pool and celebrate the end of the
semester.
- Prior to Traveler making his first football game appearance in
1940, USC's mascot was a campus mutt called George Tirebiter that went around campus
chasing cars. A statue was erected in his honor in 2006.
- Spectators walking from campus to the
Coliseum
back-kick the base of one of the flag poles at the
edge of campus on Exposition Boulevard to ensure good luck for the
football team at their next game.
- The week preceding the annual football matchup with UCLA is
known as "Troy Week" and features a number of traditions including
CONQUEST! "The Ultimate Trojan Experience", Save Tommy Night, the
CONQUEST! Bonfire, and all-night vigils by the Trojan Knights to protect the campus from
UCLA Bruins.
- TroyCamp
is USC's primary charity that serves children from the community in
numerous ways.
- Songfest is an annual event on campus to showcase student
talent. Most fraternities and sororities "team up" to perform in
the show that benefits Troy Camp. The Songfest Trophy was most
recently won by Alpha Delta Chi and Theta Xi (2009) after a four
year winning streak by Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Gamma Omega
(2004-2008).
- Pranks between UCLA
and USC
were commonplace several decades ago. Both universities have
cracked down on pranks since a 1989 incident when USC students
released hundreds of crickets into the
main UCLA library during finals
week.
- Days
before a clash between rivals UCLA
and USC in
2009, the Bruins mascot was vandalized. It was splashed in
cardinal and gold paint, USC's official colors sparking memories of
pranks played in the years earlier.
Mascots

Statue of USC's former unofficial
mascot, George Tirebiter
- Traveler – Current official mascot; Andalusian horse.
- George Tirebiter – Past
unofficial mascot; car-chasing dog.
- Tommy Trojan
– Unofficial; real name is "Trojan Shrine"; the
bronze statue is commonly mistaken as the school's official
mascot.
Marching band
USC's
marching band, known as
The Spirit of Troy, has been featured in at
least 10 major
movie and performed in the
1932 and
1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
They have also performed on television shows and with other
musicians.

The drum major of the Spirit of Troy
wears a more elaborate uniform and conducts the band with a
sword.
The band performed on the title track of the
1979 Fleetwood
Mac album
Tusk, which went
on to be a
multi-platinum record.
Additionally, the band later played on another multi-platinum
Fleetwood Mac album,
The
Dance (1997). The Spirit of Troy is the only collegiate
band to have two platinum records. In recent years, the band has
appeared at the
2009 Grammy
Awards, accompanying
Radiohead; on the
2009 Academy Awards with
Beyoncé Knowles and
Hugh Jackman; and during the finale of
American Idol 2008, backing
Renaldo Lapuz in instrumentation of his
original song "We're Brothers Forever." In 2009, the band played on
the show
Dancing With the
Stars.
The USC
band was only one of two American groups invited to march in the
Hong
Kong
Chinese New Year
parade in 2003 and 2004. The Trojan Marching Band performed
at the 2005 World Expo in
Nagoya,
Japan.
In May 2006, the Trojan Marching Band
traveled to Italy
, performing
once in Florence, and twice in Rome (including in front of the
Coliseum). The band has also, for many years, performed
the 1812 Overture with the Los Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra (or occasionally with other orchestras) each year at
the Hollywood
Bowl
"Tchaikovsky Spectacular".
Daily Trojan
The
Daily Trojan has been the
student
newspaper of USC since 1912 and is
a primary source of news and information for the campus. It secured
the first interview of President
Richard
Nixon after his resignation. The publication does not receive
financial aid from the university and instead runs entirely on
advertisement revenue. Published from Monday to Friday during the
fall and spring semesters, the newspaper turns into the Summer
Trojan during the summer term and publishes once a week. It is the
paper of record on campus.
El Rodeo
USC's
yearbook is the student-run
El Rodeo. One of the
oldest student traditions at the university, the first edition was
released in 1889 and was originally called
The Sybil. The
name was changed to
El Rodeo in 1899 to reflect the
cowboy-themed events students threw to advertise the yearbook as a
"roundup" of the year's events. Long packaged with the Student
Activity Card (which allowed students access to all home sports
games), with the dissolution of the Spirit Activity Card in 2007
the yearbook is now sold separately as a stand-alone item.
Spirit groups

The Song Girls celebrating a USC
Trojans football victory
Founded in 1969, the USC Song Girls appear at all football,
basketball, and volleyball games as well as rallies, university and
alumni functions. Unlike other college cheer teams, Song Girls are
primarily a dance squad and do not perform gymnastics, stunts or
lead cheers. Founded in 1919, the USC Yell Leaders worked closely
with the Spirit of Troy and the Song Girls to lead cheers and
perform stunts to rally Trojan fans at football, basketball, and
volleyball games. The sweater-clad team consisted of all men for
most of its existence, though the squad later opened itself up to
applicants from both sexes and did feature one female Yell Leader
in 1998. They were disbanded by the University before the 2006
season and replaced by the co-ed Spirit Leaders. The Spirit
Leaders, established before the 2006-2007 season, lead chants and
motivate the crowds during Trojan football, basketball, volleyball,
water polo, soccer, and baseball games and, like the Song Girls,
travel with the team to post-season events such as bowl games and
the NCAA Basketball Tournament.
Greek life
USC's Program Board sponsors Springfest, held annually in McCarthy
Quad
The
Greek Community,
making up approximately a fifth of the student body, has had a long
and influential history on the campus. Centered on a portion of on
West 28th Street known as "The Row", located between
Figueroa Street and Hoover Street just north
of campus, USC's Greek system began soon after the school's
founding when Kappa Alpha Theta founded a chapter in 1887.
With 20 fraternities and 10 sororities in the Interfraternity
Council (IFC) and
Panhellenic Council
(PHC), respectively, the USC Greek community has over 2,650 members
and is one of the largest on the West Coast. It regularly
participates in Homecoming and Songfest, and the community's
philanthropic efforts and success in philanthropic leadership
annually raise over $150,000.
Outside of the Panhellenic and Interfraternal councils, the Greek
community at USC is very diverse, boasting the Multicultural,
Asian, Inter-Fraternity (comprised of professional fraternities),
and National Panhellenic (historically black) Greek Councils.
Organizations governed by these councils include chapters of some
of the oldest Latino and Black Greek organizations in the country,
professional business, engineering, and pre-law fraternities, and
Asian and multiculturally based organizations that range from 5 to
over 60 years old.
USC and Hollywood
Because
of USC's proximity to Hollywood
and close ties between the School of Cinematic Arts
and entertainment industry, the university has been used in
numerous movies, TV shows, commercials, and music videos.
USC
serves as a popular spot for filmmakers, standing in for numerous
other universities, "playing" institutions such as Harvard
and Oxford
in movies and on television.
Movies filmed at USC include
Forrest
Gump,
Legally
Blonde,
Road Trip,
The Girl Next
Door,
Harold & Kumar Go to
White Castle,
Blue
Chips,
Ghostbusters,
Live Free or Die
Hard,
House Party 2,
The Number 23 and
The Graduate. TV shows that
have used the USC campus include
Cold
Case,
Entourage,
24,
The
O.C.,
Beverly Hills
90210,
Moesha,
Saved by the Bell: The
College Years,
The Fresh Prince of
Bel-Air,
House,
Undeclared,
The West Wing,
Alias,
Monk and
Gilmore Girls. The USC campus also
appears on the video game
Midnight Club: Los Angeles
on its "South Central Map Expansion".
Recently the campus has served as a backdrop for popular television
games shows
Jeopardy! and
Wheel of
Fortune. Other television shows that have been filmed on
campus include the
2004
Democratic Primary Debate,
Hardball with Chris Matthews,
The Scholar,
Best Damn Sports Show Period,
and
ESPN College Gameday.
Notes
a. The acronym
"
USC" is a
registered trademark of the
University.
b. Despite its prevalent use in sports-related
articles, the official position of USC discourages use of "Southern
Cal" in any context, as clearly stated in all
media guides: "Note to the media: In editorial
references to athletic teams of the University of Southern
California, the following are preferred: USC, Southern California,
So. California, Troy and Trojans for men’s or women’s teams, and
Women of Troy for women’s teams. PLEASE do not use Southern Cal
(it’s like calling San Francisco “Frisco” or North Carolina “North
Car.”). The usage of "Southern Cal" on licensed apparel and
merchandise is limited in scope and necessary to protect federal
trademark rights."
c. Specifically Hong Kong
, China; Jakarta
, Indonesia
; Taipei
, Taiwan
; Mexico City
; and Tokyo
, Japan
.
USC International Offices
d. The NCAA does not conduct a championship for
Division I-A football. Instead, teams are awarded championships by
various private organizations, currently the recognized
championships are awarded by the
Associated Press poll and the
Bowl Championship Series --however
not always in unison.
e. The precise colors can be found on the
USC Graphic Identity Program website: the correct
Pantone color for USC Cardinal is PMS 201C
and USC Gold is PMS 123C.
References
External links